| Literature DB >> 31780883 |
Virginie Dinet1, Klaus G Petry1, Jerome Badaut2,3.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the principal cause of death and disability in children and young adults. Clinical and preclinical research efforts have been carried out to understand the acute, life-threatening pathophysiological events happening after TBI. In the past few years, however, it was recognized that TBI causes significant morbidity weeks, months, or years after the initial injury, thereby contributing substantially to the overall burden of TBI and the decrease of life expectancy in these patients. Long-lasting sequels of TBI include cognitive decline/dementia, sensory-motor dysfunction, and psychiatric disorders, and most important for patients is the need for socio-economic rehabilitation affecting their quality of life. Cerebrovascular alterations have been described during the first week after TBI for direct consequence development of neuroinflammatory process in relation to brain edema. Within the brain-immune interactions, the complement system, which is a family of blood and cell surface proteins, participates in the pathophysiology process. In fact, the complement system is part of the primary defense and clearance component of innate and adaptive immune response. In this review, the complement activation after TBI will be described in relation to the activation of the microglia and astrocytes as well as the blood-brain barrier dysfunction during the first week after the injury. Considering the neuroinflammatory activity as a causal element of neurological handicaps, some major parallel lines of complement activity in multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer pathologies with regard to cognitive impairment will be discussed for chronic TBI. A better understanding of the role of complement activation could facilitate the development of new therapeutic approaches for TBI.Entities:
Keywords: astrocyte; blood-brain barrier; complement; neuroinflammation; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2019 PMID: 31780883 PMCID: PMC6861304 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.01178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Schematic representation of complement activation pathways: The complement system is composed of three pathways (classical, lectin, and alternative pathway) that involve a collection of blood and cell surface proteins to eliminate pathogens from organism or damaged cells. This system consists of a series of proteins that interact with one another in a highly regulated manner. The classical pathway helps antibodies and phagocytic cells to clear pathogens or damaged cells. The lectin pathway is activated when MBL binds to mannose residues on the pathogen surface. This pathway is very similar to the classical pathway. The alternative pathway is an important part of innate immune system in which proteins cleave one another to form enzymatic complex able to initiate amplification of further cleavages and finally promotes inflammation by production of anaphylactic fragments. The final product of each activated complement pathway is the formation of the MAC in the target cell membrane. Once activated, the complement system has several major functions: lysis of pathogens or damaged cells, activation of inflammation, opsonization, and immune clearance.
Summary of complement effects on the TBI process in animals models and human studies.
| Severe TBI | C3/CFB | ↑CSF | Kossmann et al., |
| Severe TBI | C3/C1q/C4 | ↑CSF | Stahel et al., |
| Severe TBI | C5b9 | ↑CSF | Stahel et al., |
| Severe TBI | C3/C9 | ↑Plasma | Bao et al., |
| Severe TBI | MBL | ↑Plasma | Osthoff et al., |
| Cortical impact (severe TBI) | C9/CFB | ↑Serum | Thelin et al., |
| Cortical contusion (severe TBI) | C3 | ↑Deposits (peri-lesion tissue) | Bellander et al., |
| Cortical contusion (severe TBI) | C9 | ↑Deposits (damaged neurons) | Bellander et al., |
| Intra-cerebral hemorrhage | ↓Brain edema | Sewell et al., | |
| Severe TBI swine resuscitation | CD59/C1q | ↓Complement system activation associated to a decrease of lesion size | Dekker et al., |
| Cortical impact (severe TBI) | CD59−/− mice | ↑Neuronal cell death | Stahel et al., |
| Severe closed head injury mice | C6 antisense oligonucleotide | ↓C5b9 deposits/axon loss | Fluiter et al., |
| Cortical impact (severe TBI) | C3 cleavage inhibition | ↓Microglial/astrocyte activations | Rich et al., |
| Focal trauma (severe TBI) | ↓Neuronal cell death | Leinhase et al., | |
| Focal trauma (severe TBI) | Anti-CFB antibody | ↓Inflammation/cell death | Leinhase et al., |
| Cortical impact (severe TBI) | C1q inhibitor | ↓Cognitive dysfunction/contusion volumes | Longhi et al., |
| Cortical impact (severe TBI) | MBL | ↑MBL deposits (injured cortex) | Longhi et al., |
| Cortical impact (severe TBI) | ↑Cortical cell death | Longhi et al., |
CSF, CerebroSpinal Fluid; MBL, Mannose Binding Lectin protein.